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Oct 31, 2024
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HIST 3320 - American Eugenics Movement If scientific discoveries reveal how to genetically engineer populations that are less prone to age-old physical and mental illnesses, it is not immoral to ignore this new knowledge? This was the main question posed by the assortment of scientists, philosophers, politicians, and social activists who comprised the eugenics movement during its late-nineteenth-and early-twentieth-century heyday. This course examines the history of the American eugenics movement from its origins, in the ideas of Lamarck, Darwin, Galton, and Mendel, to its culmination in government policies and legislation affecting marriage, birth control, and immigration, among other things.
Credit(s): 4 When Offered: In-person, Online, or Hybrid. Course Attribute(s):
- Social Perspectives and Intercultural Interconnecting Perspectives course for the Dialogues.
- This is a writing-enhanced course.
- Honors Scholars course.
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